Skip advert
Advertisement

Hyundai Coupe TSIII

Speacial aims to breathe new life into two-door.

Overall Auto Express Rating

2.0 out of 5

Find your Hyundai Coupe
Offers from our trusted partners on this car and its predecessors...
Hassle-free way to a brand new car
Or are you looking to sell your car?
Customers got an average £1000 more vs part exchange quotes
Advertisement

If looks alone sold cars, then this TSIII Coupé would be a winner. But at nearly £20,000, it’s battling against some of Europe’s best hot hatches – and it falls way short. As a quirky choice with plenty of kerb appeal, a base-spec 1.6-litre model might be tempting, but in TSIII form it’s simply too expensive and too far behind the pack.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Like the i-Mode, Hyundai’s Coupé is also something of a head-turner. When the first- generation car hit the market in 1996, some even called it the ‘Korean Ferrari’!

This is the third generation of the firm’s most desirable model, and it looks better than ever – particularly in the limited-edition TSIII guise you see here. This comes in either white or red and adds anthracite alloys, a larger rear spoiler and quad exhaust pipes. Inside, quilted leather sports seats provide a touch of class.

But the updates are purely cosmetic. The only engine choice is the 141bhp 2.0-litre unit from the standard line-up, which is slow, gruff and at odds with the coupe’s sporty pretensions. At higher revs, the four-cylinder powerplant fills the cabin witha strained, unpleasant noise.

This clash between styling and performance tells you everything you need to know about Hyundai’s two-door. The seats, for example, look great, but they’re set too high and the driving position is poor, with no reach adjustment for the steering wheel, and a distinct lack of headroom for anyone over six foot tall.

Similarly, the steering itself initially flatters to deceive with a nice, heavy turn-in. However, it quickly becomes apparent it’s artificially over-weighted to compensate for lack of feel. Other niggles include a fiddly stereo. The whole cabin, though neat and well screwed together, seems 10 years out of date.

On the plus side, the TSIII rides well most of the time – although it doesn’t deal with potholes very gracefully – and the five-speed box springs through gears with assuredness. The VW-like blue instrument backlighting is pretty, too.

But at £19,705, the Coupé is in hot hatch territory, battling with the Honda Civic Type R and VW Golf GTI – cars with the bite to match their bark.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Mercedes says ‘no thank you’ to EQ: EV brand to be axed
Mercedes-AMG EQS 53 - EQS badge
News

Mercedes says ‘no thank you’ to EQ: EV brand to be axed

Mercedes will roll back EQ branding for its electric cars as the first generation of EV models reaches the end of its lifecycle.
15 May 2024
Ooh la la: new DS flagship to get inspiration from world’s coolest car
DS flagship - exclusive image
News

Ooh la la: new DS flagship to get inspiration from world’s coolest car

The iconic Citroen DS was voted the world’s coolest car by our readers and now DS is aiming for the same success with its new premium flagship
15 May 2024
UK faces “epidemic” of young uninsured drivers
Car crash
News

UK faces “epidemic” of young uninsured drivers

The number of young people convicted of driving without insurance has tripled since 2021, due to sky-rocketing premiums
17 May 2024